Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Topical Application of Tranexamic Acid to Reduce Post-operative Bleeding in Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery
The goal of this project is to determine whether the use of tranexamic acid, a clot-promoting drug, applied topically over the heart in coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) will reduce post operative blood loss. The investigators' hypothesis is that the use of a tranexamic acid-containing cardiac bath prior to chest closure will result in a statistically significant reduction in blood loss and transfusion requirements in patients who undergo CABG.
Bleeding is expected during major surgeries. In patients who undergo CABG, the risk for
bleeding is increased because of the need for intra-operative anticoagulation, or thinning,
of patient blood. This anticoagulation is necessary to reduce the risk of thrombosis
potentially precipitated by the cardiopulmonary bypass machine, which pumps blood throughout
the body while the surgeon operates on the heart.
Strategies are currently used in the operating room to minimize blood loss and the need for
allogenic blood transfusion during and after cardiac surgeries. These strategies include the
use of intravenous antifibrinolytic agents, intra-operative red blood cell salvage devices,
and topical fibrin sealants. Although the risk of infection from a blood transfusion is very
small with modern methods of blood screening, the risk of developing a transfusion reaction
is possible and not predictable. Therefore, it is preferred to avoid administering a blood
transfusion unless absolutely necessary.
The use of topical antifibrinolytic agents has been explored to further reduce blood loss in
cardiac surgery. Several trials have been published in the literature since 1993 evaluating
the efficacy of various antifibrinolytic medications applied topically, as a cardiac bath,
prior to chest closure in CABG patients to reduce post-operative blood loss and potential
need for blood transfusion.
The applicability of the methodology utilized in these studies, however, is limited in the
context of the current Canadian practices of cardiac surgery. Considerable differences in
the perioperative strategies of these trials are seen, in comparison to current North
American practices of cardiac surgery. These trials also compared use of topically applied
antifibrinolytic agents, including the lysine analogue tranexamic acid, to a control in the
absence of intravenous antifibrinolytic agents. The use of intravenous lysine analogues to
reduce peri-operative bleeding has now become a near-standard of care in CABG patients.
Currently, the only available antifibrinolytic agent in Canada is the lysine analogue
tranexamic acid. This drug is widely used administered as an intravenous preparation in
cardiac surgery because its safety profile and reduction in blood loss and frequency of
blood transfusion.
There is presently no published randomized controlled trial evaluating blood loss in CABG
patients who have received intravenous tranexamic acid, plus topical tranexamic acid or
placebo.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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